The subject is Someone in the shipping department.
A sentence missing a subject or a verb is a fragment.
The subject of this sentence is present.
You. You is the subject in that sentence, and it is indeed a pronoun.
The complete subject of the sentence is 'The class'.
The subject of the sentence is Isabel.
No, it is not proper grammar to say "someone and me" as the object of a sentence. The correct phrasing would be "someone and I," as in "John and I went to the store."
No, the word 'someone' is not a noun.The word 'someone' is an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun (or name) for an unknown or unnamed person.The pronoun 'someone' functions in a sentence as a noun, as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Someone must have seen what happened. (subject of the sentence)I met someone from my hometown at the party. (direct object of the verb 'met')
Rivka Romi-Levin has written: 'Israel's ports' -- subject(s): Marine terminals, Container ports, Bibliography 'CIS shipping & ports' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Marine terminals, Shipping, Harbors 'Port privatisation' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Harbors 'Maritime Spain & Portugal' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Shipping, Harbors 'Middle East ports & shipping' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Harbors, Shipping 'Arab shipping & ports' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Marine terminals, Shipping, Harbors 'Intermodal transport' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Containerization 'China shipping & ports' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Marine terminals, Shipping
"Someone is very kind." is a complete sentence.someone- an indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentence;is- a verb, a linking verb (the object of the verb restates the subject of the sentence);very- an adverb, modifying the adjective 'kind';kind- adjective, a predicate adjective which restates the subject (someone = kind), following the linking verb.
Ingrid A. Bryan has written: 'Canada in the new global economy' -- subject(s): Economic policy, Foreign economic relations, Economic conditions 'Canadian deep sea shipping policy and the merchant marine issue' -- subject(s): History, Shipping bounties and subsidies, Merchant marine, Shipping 'Shipping conferences and Canadian shipping policy' -- subject(s): Rates, Shipping, Shipping conferences 'Shipping conference pricing policies and Eastern Canadian ports' -- subject(s): Rates, Shipping, Shipping conferences
The subject in the sentence is "you."
A subject in a sentence is who, what, or where the sentence is about.
The subject is who or what the sentence is about.
The subject of the sentence is "you."
A subject is what the sentence is about.To make a sentence with a subject think like if it was a theme.
Yes, "you" can be the subject in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "You are my friend," "you" is the subject.
Ernst G. Frankel has written: 'Ocean transportation' -- subject(s): Merchant marine, Shipping 'Restrictive shipping practices' 'Management of technological change' -- subject(s): Technological innovations, Management 'The world shipping industry' -- subject(s): Shipping 'Port planning and development' -- subject(s): Harbors, Planning